Difference between revisions of "Argument from authority"

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==Examples==
 
==Examples==
 
* "Carl Sagan says there can't be life elsewhere in the universe, so that proves it."
 
* "Carl Sagan says there can't be life elsewhere in the universe, so that proves it."
* "God says homosexuality is a sin, so it must be."
+
* "God says [[homosexuality]] is a sin, so it must be."
* "Albert Einstein said 'God does not play dice with the universe.'"
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* "[[wikipedia:Albert Einstein|Albert Einstein]] said 'God does not play dice with the universe.', so [[wikipedia:quantum physics|quantum physics]] must be wrong."
  
 
==Reference==
 
==Reference==

Revision as of 21:13, 4 August 2006

Overview

An argument from authority is any argument based solely on the credibility of a particular entity (the authority).

The presumption of credibility may proceed from any of several other presumptions, including:

  • The authority is the definitive source for knowledge on this subject, so any statement s/he makes on this subject is true by definition or is the official truth
  • The authority knows more than you do, so any counter-arguments you might propose are based on ignorance
  • The authority is infallible and incapable of error

Synonyms

  • ipse dixit (Latin: he himself said it)
  • argumentum ad verecundiam (Latin: argument to respect)

Related Pages

Examples

  • "Carl Sagan says there can't be life elsewhere in the universe, so that proves it."
  • "God says homosexuality is a sin, so it must be."
  • "Albert Einstein said 'God does not play dice with the universe.', so quantum physics must be wrong."

Reference

Notes

As a rhetorical tool, this argument often succeeds in shifting the debate from its original topic to a discussion of the merits of the cited authority, which can easily slide into ad hominem attacks ("you said so-and-so is wrong, well that just proves you're wrong!").